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Black Dahlia Avenger

The True Story

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Black Dahlia Avenger

By: Steve Hodel
Narrated by: Kevin Pierce
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For 56 years, the Black Dahlia murder case remained one of the most notorious and high-profile unsolved crimes of the 20th century. Now, Steve Hodel, a 24-year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department, believes he has finally solved the case. On January 15, 1947, 22-year-old Elizabeth Short - "The Black Dahlia" - was found dead in a vacant lot in Los Angeles, her body horribly mutilated, bisected at the waist, and posed in a bizarre manner. The horrific crime shocked the country and commanded headlines for months as the killer taunted the police with notes and phone calls. Despite the massive manhunt, the murderer was never found.

Hodel began working on the case after he retired from the LAPD when he chanced upon an intriguing piece of evidence that led him on a trail that he had no choice but to follow - since it pertained directly to him. As he dug deeper, he came to believe that the killer was also responsible for over a dozen other unsolved murders in the Los Angeles area around the same time. He also found copious evidence of corruption at the LAPD, leading him to accuse the department top brass of covering up the Black Dahlia murder in order to conceal a deeper conspiracy involving crooked politicians and gangsters.

Despite a lack of physical evidence (which had been destroyed), Hodel is able to connect numerous dots and make a plausible case, complete with lurid tales of wild orgies that were attended by celebrities such as the artist Man Ray, the director John Huston, and a host of other Hollywood elites. He also discloses his killer’s obsession with the Marquis de Sade and Jack the Ripper and how he modeled his own crimes on their behavior. In particular, there is a disturbing connection between the work of Man Ray and the horrific circumstances of Short’s murder. It is doubtful that this will be the final word on the Black Dahlia murder - too much myth surrounds it and much of his evidence is circumstantial - but Hodel’s labyrinthine tale adds much to this intriguing case.

©2003, 2011 Steve Hodel (P)2012 Audible, Inc.
Corruption & Misconduct Crime Murder Politics & Government True Crime Celebrity Cold Case

Editor reviews

The 1947 murder of Elizabeth Short led to an exhaustive and fruitless manhunt in Southern California, and the Black Dahlia case still stands as one of the most famous unsolved murders in American history. Retired LAPD detective Steve Hodel, however, has uncovered evidence that may reveal the mysterious killer's identity: his father George.

Kevin Pierce gives a striking edge to Black Dahlia Avenger, evoking the no-nonsense style of classic LA noirs like Double Indemnity and Sunset Boulevard. But Hodel's work is all too real, even as the gory and byzantine details of this riveting case seem like a Hollywood tall tale.

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The murder of Elizabeth Short (known as the Black Dahlia) has remained unsolved for more than fifty years. Now, former LAPD detective Steve Hodel believes he has uncovered the killer. Following a death in his family, Hodel found documents that set him off on a murder hunt, unearthing evidence that the Black Dahlia killer may have also murdered several other women. With links to controversial photographer Man Ray and movie director John Huston, Hodel identifies a possible cover-up by the Los Angeles Police Department in a web of lies, corruption and a series of brutal murders.

Since the time of the murder in 1947, theories about who killed the Black Dahlia have been numerous and varied. Without a body or crime scene to examine, Steve Hodel collects an enormous amount of circumstantial evidence that points very firmly at one man. The book is thoroughly researched and well written, and though the author sometimes goes into so much detail that it almost becomes overkill, what he ends up with is a pretty solid case.

Over the years, the range of suspects put forward for the murder has included such luminaries as Bugsy Siegal, Woody Guthrie and Edward Wayne Edwards (who would have been only thirteen years old at the time), but Steve Hodel’s book is the first one to propose an actual prime suspect - one that doesn’t rely on improbable scenarios or unreliable witnesses.

A fascinating and thought-provoking book.

A fascinating and thought-provoking book.

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Horrifying and engrossing. Interested in more than the sensationalist prurience of so many books in this genre, the author vividly depicts the underworld of the period and presents a case that I found very compelling.
Unlike other reviewers, I had no problem with the narration either.

Insightful

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I'm not convinced by any of the evidence presented that George Hodell was the Black Dahlia Avenger. Nor, after further reading of his daughter do i think he molested her. He was however a fascinating man with an interesting life and circle of friend, which this book focuses heavily on.

Still unsolved

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The watch really sums up this book and it’s contents. At the very end he discusses a photo of the body in which he says that a watch has been inserted into the abdomen of Elizabeth Short’s bisected body. And it obviously looks just like his father’s old watch, one that went “missing.” But since this recording he has conceded this is not a watch and likely bone or tissue. Of course, in the book he goes on about how this is an ode to his famous friend’s work etc etc.
A veteran homicide detective should not be making such wild suppositions and trying to force things to fit this way. He is clearly heavily biased in trying to make a case against his father (for whatever reason) and it’s quite weak when you get past his repeated and persistent affirmations that this is all correct. I laughed out loud when the Assistant DA’s letter said he find circumstantial cases stronger than solid evidence cases. Are these people real or cartoon characters? There is no physical evidence at all and while there is a fair amount of circumstantial evidence, it feels more like Steve found out his father was a suspect and dug until he found scraps. He then blew it all up to write his book. There are two men he claims are working together to commit these crimes and they don’t have a single alibi between them for any of the crimes? It would have been nice if Steve had looked into it.
So of course in the sequel he accuses his father of also being the Zodiac. Who else could get away with America’s most infamous unidentified serial killings?
Sorry to contradict the author, but the case is not closed. Nor is he objective enough to make that call.

Good thing he retired

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Very weird part of recording at 2:15:30 in part 2, where the narrator pauses, claps, and repeats themselves. I assume this was a bad take that the editors have overlooked? Overall an interesting listen, regardless of whether you have any investment in this theory. Would recommend.

Interesting but badly edited in terms of recording

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